The Deadly 60 team head for the Polar Zoo where they are studying Lynx. Steve Backshall watches them climb and admits to being a little nervous as one climbs a tree just above his head. He suspends a piece of meat to show how they can jump over two meters.
Subscribe to BBCEarth: http://bit.ly/BBCEarthSubBBC Earth YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/BBCEarth
BBC Earth Facebook http://www.facebook.com/bbcearth (ex-UK only)
BBC Earth Twitter http://www.twitter.com/bbcearth
Visit http://www.bbcearth.com for all the latest animal news and wildlife videos
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

published:27 Oct 2013

views:1246507

With new LYNXAustralia, even Kiwi guys can find some of that Aussie magic…
Lynx is committed to producing styling & grooming products that help guys look better, smell better and feel more confident when taking on the world. We exist to help Australian guys express themselves authentically.

A photographer in Alaska woke up to strange noises at his door and worried his home was being broken into, only to find seven cute lynx kittens and their mother playing on his front porch.
Tim Newton came across the lynx family when he heard scratching at his door.
Initially he was worried that someone was attempting to break in, but because he lives in Alaska he said he also realized the intruder might be a dangerous animal - such as a bear.
►Subscribe : https://goo.gl/awGF6H
►Facebook : https//goo.gl/Q5GX7j

Lynx

A lynx (/ˈlɪŋks/; plural lynx or lynxes) is any of the four species within the Lynxgenus of medium-sized wild cats. The name "lynx" originated in Middle English via Latin from the Greek word "λύγξ", derived from the Indo-European root "leuk-", meaning "light, brightness", in reference to the luminescence of its reflective eyes.

Neither the caracal, sometimes called the desert lynx, nor the jungle cat, called the jungle lynx, is a member of the Lynx genus.

Appearance

Lynx have a short tail, characteristic tufts of black hair on the tips of their ears, large, padded paws for walking on snow and long whiskers on the face. Under their neck, they have a ruff which has black bars resembling a bow tie although this is often not visible.

Body colour varies from medium brown to goldish to beige-white, and is occasionally marked with dark brown spots, especially on the limbs. All species of lynx have white fur on their chests, bellies and on the insides of their legs, fur which is an extension of the chest and belly fur. The lynx's colouring, fur length and paw size vary according to the climate in their range. In the Southwestern United States, they are short-haired, dark in colour and their paws are smaller and less padded. Lynx in colder northern climates, have progressively thicker fur, the colour gets lighter, their paws are larger and become more padded (for snowy environments). Their paws may be larger than a human hand or foot.

After registering to use the site, users can create a user profile, add other users as "friends", exchange messages, post status updates and photos, share videos, use various apps and receive notifications when others update their profiles. Additionally, users may join common-interest user groups, organized by workplace, school or college, or other characteristics, and categorize their friends into lists such as "People From Work" or "Close Friends". Also users can complain or block unpleasant people. Facebook had over 1.18 billion monthly active users as of August 2015. Because of the large volume of data users submit to the service, Facebook has come under scrutiny for their privacy policies. Facebook, Inc. held its initial public offering in February 2012 and began selling stock to the public three months later, reaching an original peak market capitalization of $104 billion. On July 13, 2015, Facebook became the fastest company in the Standard & Poor's 500 Index to reach a market cap of $250 billion. Following its Q3 earnings call in 2015, Facebook's market cap soared past $300 billion.

Incredible Jumping Lynx - Deadly 60 - Series 2 - BBC

The Deadly 60 team head for the Polar Zoo where they are studying Lynx. Steve Backshall watches them climb and admits to being a little nervous as one climbs a tree just above his head. He suspends a piece of meat to show how they can jump over two meters.
Subscribe to BBCEarth: http://bit.ly/BBCEarthSubBBC Earth YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/BBCEarth
BBC Earth Facebook http://www.facebook.com/bbcearth (ex-UK only)
BBC Earth Twitter http://www.twitter.com/bbcearth
Visit http://www.bbcearth.com for all the latest animal news and wildlife videos
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

1:51

LYNX Australia | Find your Aussie magic

LYNX Australia | Find your Aussie magic

LYNX Australia | Find your Aussie magic

With new LYNXAustralia, even Kiwi guys can find some of that Aussie magic…
Lynx is committed to producing styling & grooming products that help guys look better, smell better and feel more confident when taking on the world. We exist to help Australian guys express themselves authentically.

Alaskan man snaps cute photos of lynx kittens on his porch

A photographer in Alaska woke up to strange noises at his door and worried his home was being broken into, only to find seven cute lynx kittens and their mother playing on his front porch.
Tim Newton came across the lynx family when he heard scratching at his door.
Initially he was worried that someone was attempting to break in, but because he lives in Alaska he said he also realized the intruder might be a dangerous animal - such as a bear.
►Subscribe : https://goo.gl/awGF6H
►Facebook : https//goo.gl/Q5GX7j

Link with the Lynx - The Secrets of Nature

With large tufted ears, a short tail and a trusting look, one could almost believe that lynxes are just big cats. In their hearts, however, they are wild and untamed. They are the tigers of Europe. This is the story of a hard earned friendship. On the one side is Milos Majda, a quiet, nature loving ranger at the Mala Fatra national park in Slovakia. On the other side are two small lynxes, fresh from the zoo. With Milos' help, it's hoped the lynxes will return to the home of their ancestors in the forests of Mala Fatra in the heart of Slovakia. For two years Milos Majda and the biologist and animal filmmaker Tomas Hulik follow the journey of the lynx siblings from their warm nursery inside a cabin into the wilderness.

Plot: In episode 1, The Choker has escaped from jail and is running amok. Only Nightwatch can catch her. In episode 2, heroes Rush and Bedbug team up to take down a horde of crappy robots. Episode 3 brings us Syren, a mild mannered secretary until help is needed! In Episode 4 we see the local asylum under attack from within, villain Cinders is running amok, burning the place down and only Lynx can take her down! Episode 5 ends the series with Talon, a vigilante chosen by the sexy alien Huntress as a mating partner.

Plot: It's winter in Woodland and Franklin is excited about spring coming because his new baby sister will be born. Following the lead of a myth his mom told him, he assumes the role of a Knight and sets out to the woods on a quest for spring.

Quotes:

[first lines]::Narrator: Franklin could count by twos and tie his shoes. He loved warm spring showers, hot summer days and crisp autumn winds. He also loved the winter because winter meant snow and playing in the snow made him very happy. One January, when the snow laid deeper and thicker than anyone in Woodland could remember, Franklin was especially happy. Something was about to happen that would change his life forever.

Franklin Turtle: Snow, snow and more snow.::Beaver: You know, it must be the snow hiding spring.::Rabbit: We've gotta search far and wide.::Bear: High and low.::Franklin Turtle: Search for a place that doesn't have snow.

Snail: Just as I thought. Now that Franklin's going to be a big brother, he doesn't need me anymore.

[last lines]::Franklin Turtle: Do you remember bringing me home from the hospital?::Mrs. Turtle: It's a day I'll never forget, my green knight.::Franklin Turtle: Oh, I almost forgot. [placing a cherry blossom in his new sister's crib] This is for you, Harriet. By the way, I'm Franklin. I'm your big brother.

Armadillo: Hey, who do you love more: your Mom or your Dad?::Franklin Turtle: That's a silly question! I love them both!::Armadillo: Exactly! And my parents have plenty of love for both me and my little brother. Nothing to worry about, right?::Franklin Turtle: Right.

Franklin Turtle: Guess what. We're having a party tomorrow.::Beaver: Are we invited?::Franklin Turtle: Well... no.::Rabbit: If you're having a party, why aren't we invited?::Franklin Turtle: I think it's only for grownups.::Beaver: Your family's not having a baby shower, are they?::Franklin Turtle: What's wrong with a baby shower?::Rabbit: The baby's not even born yet and already your family's throwing parties for it?::Beaver: Enjoy your parents while you still can.

Snail: [staring at a snowturtle that represents Franklin's coming sibling] You're really lucky, Baby Turtle. You're gonna have big brother who'll make sure you're never late for school or parties. He'll help you with your homework and he'll play fun games with you. [sobs] But most of all, you're lucky because you'll have Franklin.

Incredible Jumping Lynx - Deadly 60 - Series 2 - BBC

The Deadly 60 team head for the Polar Zoo where they are studying Lynx. Steve Backshall watches them climb and admits to being a little nervous as one climbs a tree just above his head. He suspends a piece of meat to show how they can jump over two meters.
Subscribe to BBCEarth: http://bit.ly/BBCEarthSubBBC Earth YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/BBCEarth
BBC Earth Facebook http://www.facebook.com/bbcearth (ex-UK only)
BBC Earth Twitter http://www.twitter.com/bbcearth
Visit http://www.bbcearth.com for all the latest animal news and wildlife videos
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

published: 27 Oct 2013

LYNX Australia | Find your Aussie magic

With new LYNXAustralia, even Kiwi guys can find some of that Aussie magic…
Lynx is committed to producing styling & grooming products that help guys look better, smell better and feel more confident when taking on the world. We exist to help Australian guys express themselves authentically.

Alaskan man snaps cute photos of lynx kittens on his porch

A photographer in Alaska woke up to strange noises at his door and worried his home was being broken into, only to find seven cute lynx kittens and their mother playing on his front porch.
Tim Newton came across the lynx family when he heard scratching at his door.
Initially he was worried that someone was attempting to break in, but because he lives in Alaska he said he also realized the intruder might be a dangerous animal - such as a bear.
►Subscribe : https://goo.gl/awGF6H
►Facebook : https//goo.gl/Q5GX7j

Link with the Lynx - The Secrets of Nature

With large tufted ears, a short tail and a trusting look, one could almost believe that lynxes are just big cats. In their hearts, however, they are wild and untamed. They are the tigers of Europe. This is the story of a hard earned friendship. On the one side is Milos Majda, a quiet, nature loving ranger at the Mala Fatra national park in Slovakia. On the other side are two small lynxes, fresh from the zoo. With Milos' help, it's hoped the lynxes will return to the home of their ancestors in the forests of Mala Fatra in the heart of Slovakia. For two years Milos Majda and the biologist and animal filmmaker Tomas Hulik follow the journey of the lynx siblings from their warm nursery inside a cabin into the wilderness.

The Deadly 60 team head for the Polar Zoo where they are studying Lynx. Steve Backshall watches them climb and admits to being a little nervous as one climbs a tree just above his head. He suspends a piece of meat to show how they can jump over two meters.
Subscribe to BBCEarth: http://bit.ly/BBCEarthSubBBC Earth YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/BBCEarth
BBC Earth Facebook http://www.facebook.com/bbcearth (ex-UK only)
BBC Earth Twitter http://www.twitter.com/bbcearth
Visit http://www.bbcearth.com for all the latest animal news and wildlife videos
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

The Deadly 60 team head for the Polar Zoo where they are studying Lynx. Steve Backshall watches them climb and admits to being a little nervous as one climbs a tree just above his head. He suspends a piece of meat to show how they can jump over two meters.
Subscribe to BBCEarth: http://bit.ly/BBCEarthSubBBC Earth YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/BBCEarth
BBC Earth Facebook http://www.facebook.com/bbcearth (ex-UK only)
BBC Earth Twitter http://www.twitter.com/bbcearth
Visit http://www.bbcearth.com for all the latest animal news and wildlife videos
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

LYNX Australia | Find your Aussie magic

With new LYNXAustralia, even Kiwi guys can find some of that Aussie magic…
Lynx is committed to producing styling & grooming products that help guys look bett...

With new LYNXAustralia, even Kiwi guys can find some of that Aussie magic…
Lynx is committed to producing styling & grooming products that help guys look better, smell better and feel more confident when taking on the world. We exist to help Australian guys express themselves authentically.

With new LYNXAustralia, even Kiwi guys can find some of that Aussie magic…
Lynx is committed to producing styling & grooming products that help guys look better, smell better and feel more confident when taking on the world. We exist to help Australian guys express themselves authentically.

Alaskan man snaps cute photos of lynx kittens on his porch

A photographer in Alaska woke up to strange noises at his door and worried his home was being broken into, only to find seven cute lynx kittens and their mother...

A photographer in Alaska woke up to strange noises at his door and worried his home was being broken into, only to find seven cute lynx kittens and their mother playing on his front porch.
Tim Newton came across the lynx family when he heard scratching at his door.
Initially he was worried that someone was attempting to break in, but because he lives in Alaska he said he also realized the intruder might be a dangerous animal - such as a bear.
►Subscribe : https://goo.gl/awGF6H
►Facebook : https//goo.gl/Q5GX7j

A photographer in Alaska woke up to strange noises at his door and worried his home was being broken into, only to find seven cute lynx kittens and their mother playing on his front porch.
Tim Newton came across the lynx family when he heard scratching at his door.
Initially he was worried that someone was attempting to break in, but because he lives in Alaska he said he also realized the intruder might be a dangerous animal - such as a bear.
►Subscribe : https://goo.gl/awGF6H
►Facebook : https//goo.gl/Q5GX7j

Link with the Lynx - The Secrets of Nature

With large tufted ears, a short tail and a trusting look, one could almost believe that lynxes are just big cats. In their hearts, however, they are wild and un...

With large tufted ears, a short tail and a trusting look, one could almost believe that lynxes are just big cats. In their hearts, however, they are wild and untamed. They are the tigers of Europe. This is the story of a hard earned friendship. On the one side is Milos Majda, a quiet, nature loving ranger at the Mala Fatra national park in Slovakia. On the other side are two small lynxes, fresh from the zoo. With Milos' help, it's hoped the lynxes will return to the home of their ancestors in the forests of Mala Fatra in the heart of Slovakia. For two years Milos Majda and the biologist and animal filmmaker Tomas Hulik follow the journey of the lynx siblings from their warm nursery inside a cabin into the wilderness.

With large tufted ears, a short tail and a trusting look, one could almost believe that lynxes are just big cats. In their hearts, however, they are wild and untamed. They are the tigers of Europe. This is the story of a hard earned friendship. On the one side is Milos Majda, a quiet, nature loving ranger at the Mala Fatra national park in Slovakia. On the other side are two small lynxes, fresh from the zoo. With Milos' help, it's hoped the lynxes will return to the home of their ancestors in the forests of Mala Fatra in the heart of Slovakia. For two years Milos Majda and the biologist and animal filmmaker Tomas Hulik follow the journey of the lynx siblings from their warm nursery inside a cabin into the wilderness.

Link with the Lynx - The Secrets of Nature

With large tufted ears, a short tail and a trusting look, one could almost believe that lynxes are just big cats. In their hearts, however, they are wild and untamed. They are the tigers of Europe. This is the story of a hard earned friendship. On the one side is Milos Majda, a quiet, nature loving ranger at the Mala Fatra national park in Slovakia. On the other side are two small lynxes, fresh from the zoo. With Milos' help, it's hoped the lynxes will return to the home of their ancestors in the forests of Mala Fatra in the heart of Slovakia. For two years Milos Majda and the biologist and animal filmmaker Tomas Hulik follow the journey of the lynx siblings from their warm nursery inside a cabin into the wilderness.

Trout head soup in the dutch oven. Lynx haunch roasting on a spit. Guns in the tree. Mashed chokecherry patty drying beside the fire. Wild apples mixed with squash cooking in a small pot. Bush life.
Link to studies about Native Foods: http://traditionalanimalfoods.org/
Life is a search for energy, eating is for the living, and killing and gathering is the economy of nature.... where will your next meal come from?
We also look at chokecherries as a staple food cooked over the fire and dried, safely cross a frozen creek, identify sleeping animals in snow burrows and take a crack at a live hare.
Maple Gazed Mystery Meat & FishHeadSoup Over Open Fire
One moment nature presents an opening, and the next minute, it takes it away. Game of any kind is not easily taken and it doesn't offe...

Link with the Lynx - The Secrets of Nature

With large tufted ears, a short tail and a trusting look, one could almost believe that lynxes are just big cats. In their hearts, however, they are wild and un...

With large tufted ears, a short tail and a trusting look, one could almost believe that lynxes are just big cats. In their hearts, however, they are wild and untamed. They are the tigers of Europe. This is the story of a hard earned friendship. On the one side is Milos Majda, a quiet, nature loving ranger at the Mala Fatra national park in Slovakia. On the other side are two small lynxes, fresh from the zoo. With Milos' help, it's hoped the lynxes will return to the home of their ancestors in the forests of Mala Fatra in the heart of Slovakia. For two years Milos Majda and the biologist and animal filmmaker Tomas Hulik follow the journey of the lynx siblings from their warm nursery inside a cabin into the wilderness.

With large tufted ears, a short tail and a trusting look, one could almost believe that lynxes are just big cats. In their hearts, however, they are wild and untamed. They are the tigers of Europe. This is the story of a hard earned friendship. On the one side is Milos Majda, a quiet, nature loving ranger at the Mala Fatra national park in Slovakia. On the other side are two small lynxes, fresh from the zoo. With Milos' help, it's hoped the lynxes will return to the home of their ancestors in the forests of Mala Fatra in the heart of Slovakia. For two years Milos Majda and the biologist and animal filmmaker Tomas Hulik follow the journey of the lynx siblings from their warm nursery inside a cabin into the wilderness.

Trout head soup in the dutch oven. Lynx haunch roasting on a spit. Guns in the tree. Mashed chokecherry patty drying beside the fire. Wild apples mixed with squash cooking in a small pot. Bush life.
Link to studies about Native Foods: http://traditionalanimalfoods.org/
Life is a search for energy, eating is for the living, and killing and gathering is the economy of nature.... where will your next meal come from?
We also look at chokecherries as a staple food cooked over the fire and dried, safely cross a frozen creek, identify sleeping animals in snow burrows and take a crack at a live hare.
Maple Gazed Mystery Meat & FishHeadSoup Over Open Fire
One moment nature presents an opening, and the next minute, it takes it away. Game of any kind is not easily taken and it doesn't offer itself for your consumption just because you're hungry. No doubt this hare was in shooting range, and Jeremy could have taken it, but trying to film the kill was too much to ask, so instead of scoring a hard earned meal, we were left with nothing.
We also aimed to sample some exotic meats given to us by a trapper. Not being a typical food item gave me some reservation, but consulting the literature proved that many Natives did indeed consume it's flesh and when you're hungry, food is food, meat is meat. Still, we needed to find out for ourselves. Can typical furbearing mammals be part of a survival feast when less typical and desirable foods, like snowshoe hare, where not available?
My research has shown that Natives ate more food items than most people think. While their nutrition came from big animals such as buffalo, moose, caribou, bear, deer and elk, they also ate marten, coyote, wolf, mink, weasel, wolverine, raccoon, fisher and even skunk, porcupine and chipmunks. Our daily special, the mystery meat, also made the list. Natives also ate such atypical things as loons, woodpeckers, herons, robins, jays, raven, doves, blackbirds, chickadees, and hummingbirds. But that's just a short list. In fact, the full list is much, much longer, and includes many birds, mammals, reptiles and amphibians that you would assume never was fit on any reasonable persons menu. Essentially, any animal with edible flesh, was eaten, so long as it would stay still long enough to be bludgeoned, speared, or pierced by arrow, or other. The Natives hunted and ate indiscriminately and unlike us, did not have to obey game laws or seasons - a distinct advantage in wilderness living.
In many cases, it was the whole animal that was eaten, from the nose and tongue right to the tail and hooves. Blood, intestines, organs such as the heart, liver, lungs, and the head and brain were all eaten. From the snout, right to the tail end. Some even ate antler velvet, and of course, the marrow from the bones - rich in fat.
In nature, waste is relative, but being wasteful is costly. It means that more work needs to be done in order to procure additional and sufficient resources. This may benefit other animals such as scavengers, which happily feast on man's waste, but can spell disaster to any person trying to actually live off the land.
Guts and grease is the root of the Native American diet. Those who couldn't or wouldn't eat these things wouldn't survive. Eating the whole animal wasn't just a trending thing to do - it was part of everyday life - it had to be done.
Catch n CookSnowshoe Hare: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IVIg8LEeFeA&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=3
Catch n Cook Beaver: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kbwGLPtcjJU&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=14
Catch n Cook Native Trout: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qbMr3F2J6uU&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=13
Catch n Cook Winter Trout: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=238zfcixXwc&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=12
Catch n Cook HandlineFishing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NHxLpioH5uI&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=11
Catch n Cook Wild Foraged Lunch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fJ47bkadS2k&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=7
Catch n Cook Duck and Grouse: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k-aqwymmU7o&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=5
Catch n Cook Duck and Grouse: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C-x6Ga586Qw&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=4
Catch n Cook Trout Over Fire: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Lxy5sFFA88&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=2
Catch n Cook Mystery Meat: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9WGJujzPyaY&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=1

Trout head soup in the dutch oven. Lynx haunch roasting on a spit. Guns in the tree. Mashed chokecherry patty drying beside the fire. Wild apples mixed with squash cooking in a small pot. Bush life.
Link to studies about Native Foods: http://traditionalanimalfoods.org/
Life is a search for energy, eating is for the living, and killing and gathering is the economy of nature.... where will your next meal come from?
We also look at chokecherries as a staple food cooked over the fire and dried, safely cross a frozen creek, identify sleeping animals in snow burrows and take a crack at a live hare.
Maple Gazed Mystery Meat & FishHeadSoup Over Open Fire
One moment nature presents an opening, and the next minute, it takes it away. Game of any kind is not easily taken and it doesn't offer itself for your consumption just because you're hungry. No doubt this hare was in shooting range, and Jeremy could have taken it, but trying to film the kill was too much to ask, so instead of scoring a hard earned meal, we were left with nothing.
We also aimed to sample some exotic meats given to us by a trapper. Not being a typical food item gave me some reservation, but consulting the literature proved that many Natives did indeed consume it's flesh and when you're hungry, food is food, meat is meat. Still, we needed to find out for ourselves. Can typical furbearing mammals be part of a survival feast when less typical and desirable foods, like snowshoe hare, where not available?
My research has shown that Natives ate more food items than most people think. While their nutrition came from big animals such as buffalo, moose, caribou, bear, deer and elk, they also ate marten, coyote, wolf, mink, weasel, wolverine, raccoon, fisher and even skunk, porcupine and chipmunks. Our daily special, the mystery meat, also made the list. Natives also ate such atypical things as loons, woodpeckers, herons, robins, jays, raven, doves, blackbirds, chickadees, and hummingbirds. But that's just a short list. In fact, the full list is much, much longer, and includes many birds, mammals, reptiles and amphibians that you would assume never was fit on any reasonable persons menu. Essentially, any animal with edible flesh, was eaten, so long as it would stay still long enough to be bludgeoned, speared, or pierced by arrow, or other. The Natives hunted and ate indiscriminately and unlike us, did not have to obey game laws or seasons - a distinct advantage in wilderness living.
In many cases, it was the whole animal that was eaten, from the nose and tongue right to the tail and hooves. Blood, intestines, organs such as the heart, liver, lungs, and the head and brain were all eaten. From the snout, right to the tail end. Some even ate antler velvet, and of course, the marrow from the bones - rich in fat.
In nature, waste is relative, but being wasteful is costly. It means that more work needs to be done in order to procure additional and sufficient resources. This may benefit other animals such as scavengers, which happily feast on man's waste, but can spell disaster to any person trying to actually live off the land.
Guts and grease is the root of the Native American diet. Those who couldn't or wouldn't eat these things wouldn't survive. Eating the whole animal wasn't just a trending thing to do - it was part of everyday life - it had to be done.
Catch n CookSnowshoe Hare: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IVIg8LEeFeA&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=3
Catch n Cook Beaver: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kbwGLPtcjJU&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=14
Catch n Cook Native Trout: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qbMr3F2J6uU&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=13
Catch n Cook Winter Trout: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=238zfcixXwc&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=12
Catch n Cook HandlineFishing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NHxLpioH5uI&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=11
Catch n Cook Wild Foraged Lunch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fJ47bkadS2k&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=7
Catch n Cook Duck and Grouse: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k-aqwymmU7o&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=5
Catch n Cook Duck and Grouse: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C-x6Ga586Qw&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=4
Catch n Cook Trout Over Fire: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Lxy5sFFA88&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=2
Catch n Cook Mystery Meat: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9WGJujzPyaY&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=1

Incredible Jumping Lynx - Deadly 60 - Series 2 - BBC

The Deadly 60 team head for the Polar Zoo where they are studying Lynx. Steve Backshall watches them climb and admits to being a little nervous as one climbs a tree just above his head. He suspends a piece of meat to show how they can jump over two meters.
Subscribe to BBCEarth: http://bit.ly/BBCEarthSubBBC Earth YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/BBCEarth
BBC Earth Facebook http://www.facebook.com/bbcearth (ex-UK only)
BBC Earth Twitter http://www.twitter.com/bbcearth
Visit http://www.bbcearth.com for all the latest animal news and wildlife videos
This is a channel from BBC Worldwide who help fund new BBC programmes.

1:51

LYNX Australia | Find your Aussie magic

With new LYNX Australia, even Kiwi guys can find some of that Aussie magic…
Lynx is commi...

LYNX Australia | Find your Aussie magic

With new LYNXAustralia, even Kiwi guys can find some of that Aussie magic…
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Alaskan man snaps cute photos of lynx kittens on his porch

A photographer in Alaska woke up to strange noises at his door and worried his home was being broken into, only to find seven cute lynx kittens and their mother playing on his front porch.
Tim Newton came across the lynx family when he heard scratching at his door.
Initially he was worried that someone was attempting to break in, but because he lives in Alaska he said he also realized the intruder might be a dangerous animal - such as a bear.
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Link with the Lynx - The Secrets of Nature

With large tufted ears, a short tail and a trusting look, one could almost believe that lynxes are just big cats. In their hearts, however, they are wild and untamed. They are the tigers of Europe. This is the story of a hard earned friendship. On the one side is Milos Majda, a quiet, nature loving ranger at the Mala Fatra national park in Slovakia. On the other side are two small lynxes, fresh from the zoo. With Milos' help, it's hoped the lynxes will return to the home of their ancestors in the forests of Mala Fatra in the heart of Slovakia. For two years Milos Majda and the biologist and animal filmmaker Tomas Hulik follow the journey of the lynx siblings from their warm nursery inside a cabin into the wilderness.

Trout head soup in the dutch oven. Lynx haunch roasting on a spit. Guns in the tree. Mashed chokecherry patty drying beside the fire. Wild apples mixed with squash cooking in a small pot. Bush life.
Link to studies about Native Foods: http://traditionalanimalfoods.org/
Life is a search for energy, eating is for the living, and killing and gathering is the economy of nature.... where will your next meal come from?
We also look at chokecherries as a staple food cooked over the fire and dried, safely cross a frozen creek, identify sleeping animals in snow burrows and take a crack at a live hare.
Maple Gazed Mystery Meat & FishHeadSoup Over Open Fire
One moment nature presents an opening, and the next minute, it takes it away. Game of any kind is not easily taken and it doesn't offer itself for your consumption just because you're hungry. No doubt this hare was in shooting range, and Jeremy could have taken it, but trying to film the kill was too much to ask, so instead of scoring a hard earned meal, we were left with nothing.
We also aimed to sample some exotic meats given to us by a trapper. Not being a typical food item gave me some reservation, but consulting the literature proved that many Natives did indeed consume it's flesh and when you're hungry, food is food, meat is meat. Still, we needed to find out for ourselves. Can typical furbearing mammals be part of a survival feast when less typical and desirable foods, like snowshoe hare, where not available?
My research has shown that Natives ate more food items than most people think. While their nutrition came from big animals such as buffalo, moose, caribou, bear, deer and elk, they also ate marten, coyote, wolf, mink, weasel, wolverine, raccoon, fisher and even skunk, porcupine and chipmunks. Our daily special, the mystery meat, also made the list. Natives also ate such atypical things as loons, woodpeckers, herons, robins, jays, raven, doves, blackbirds, chickadees, and hummingbirds. But that's just a short list. In fact, the full list is much, much longer, and includes many birds, mammals, reptiles and amphibians that you would assume never was fit on any reasonable persons menu. Essentially, any animal with edible flesh, was eaten, so long as it would stay still long enough to be bludgeoned, speared, or pierced by arrow, or other. The Natives hunted and ate indiscriminately and unlike us, did not have to obey game laws or seasons - a distinct advantage in wilderness living.
In many cases, it was the whole animal that was eaten, from the nose and tongue right to the tail and hooves. Blood, intestines, organs such as the heart, liver, lungs, and the head and brain were all eaten. From the snout, right to the tail end. Some even ate antler velvet, and of course, the marrow from the bones - rich in fat.
In nature, waste is relative, but being wasteful is costly. It means that more work needs to be done in order to procure additional and sufficient resources. This may benefit other animals such as scavengers, which happily feast on man's waste, but can spell disaster to any person trying to actually live off the land.
Guts and grease is the root of the Native American diet. Those who couldn't or wouldn't eat these things wouldn't survive. Eating the whole animal wasn't just a trending thing to do - it was part of everyday life - it had to be done.
Catch n CookSnowshoe Hare: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IVIg8LEeFeA&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=3
Catch n Cook Beaver: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kbwGLPtcjJU&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=14
Catch n Cook Native Trout: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qbMr3F2J6uU&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=13
Catch n Cook Winter Trout: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=238zfcixXwc&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=12
Catch n Cook HandlineFishing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NHxLpioH5uI&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=11
Catch n Cook Wild Foraged Lunch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fJ47bkadS2k&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=7
Catch n Cook Duck and Grouse: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k-aqwymmU7o&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=5
Catch n Cook Duck and Grouse: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C-x6Ga586Qw&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=4
Catch n Cook Trout Over Fire: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Lxy5sFFA88&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=2
Catch n Cook Mystery Meat: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9WGJujzPyaY&list=PLDg2Qmw9pKidQTwo3tX1ymww_RQ6DogvN&index=1

Digimon Adventure ¿Aguanta el tipo a día de hoy? L...

Rising Tide

You're an island of a girlA drift in a world with the rising tideYou know that the coming storm is going to be a crazy rideWith your alters made of trashThe aftermath of disposable dreamsYou know you were born for more than what machines provideI would write you a song that sounds likeA faded photograph of your favorite nightJust a little something to remember me byYou could sing along if you like it enoughPlay it on your phone even though it sounds kind of roughJust a little something to remember me byYou're an ocean of a girlSurrounding a world with a blackening tideYou know that the coming storm is going to be a crazy tideWith your alters made of bonesThe aftermath of disposable dreamsYou know you were born for more than what dreams provideI would write you a song that sounds likeA faded photograph of your favorite nightJust a little something to remember me byYou could sing along if you like it enoughPlay it on your phone if you like it enoughJust a little something to remember me byYou could sing along if you like it enough

Gizmodo reported on Wednesday that a former Google engineer is suing the company for discrimination, harassment, retaliation, and wrongful termination ...Chevalier's posts had been quoting in Damore's lawsuit against Google, who is also suing the company for alleged discrimination against conservative white men ... “Firing the employee who pushed back against the bullies was exactly the wrong step to take.” ... But the effect is the same....

OSLO. Sea levels will rise between 0.7 and 1.2 metres in the next two centuries even if governments end the fossil fuel era as promised under the Paris climate agreement, scientists said on Tuesday ...Ocean levels will rise inexorably because heat-trapping industrial gases already em­­itted will linger in the atmosphere, melting more ice, it said. In addition, water naturally expands as it warms above four degrees Celsius (39.2F) ... ....

The woman tasked with caring for accused Florida shooter Nikolas Cruz and his brother have moved quickly to file court papers seeking control of their inheritance the day after the massacre at Majory Stoneman Douglas High School, Newsweek reported. When the mother of Nikolas and Zachary Cruz died from flu-related pneumonia last November, their lives were entrusted to Roxanne Deschamps, the report said....

Special CounselRobert Mueller's probe is prepared to accept a guilty plea from the London-based son-in-law of a Russian businessman after he made false statements during the investigation into alleged Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential election, according to the Washington Post... Tymoshenko was later imprisoned by former president Viktor Yanukovych after signing a controversial deal with Russia for natural gas ... U.S ... U.S....

Article by WN.Com Correspondent Dallas DarlingTo this day it’s something my aunt hardly mentions, let alone discusses. And like a few other families living in the United States, it’s taboo and completely off limits ... Neither was it as widespread, since Japan had nearly conquered most of East Asia including parts of China. But still, U.S ... authorities continued the comfort station system absent formal slavery ... The U.S ... military authorities ... ....

6 Penobscot Valley of Howland ... The Lynx (14-6) overcame a bit of hardship, as starting point guard Alex Brown left the game early in the second quarter with an ankle injury after setting an early tone by ripping down seven rebounds in the first period ... The Lynx closed it out with a 13-5 run, with Thompson scoring seven of those points. Thompson said coach Lucas Turner delivered a simple message that carried the Lynx down the stretch ... ....